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Showing posts with the label perspective

A brief history of how I started to "curve" my sketches

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When asked what kind of art I make, I say "I sketch what I see." That's it. I go out on location and sketch what I see. Or I stay home and sketch what I see. The "what I see" part is what's important to me. And that brings with it all sorts of other ideas to explore. Because what do we see, really? My style of sketching is a mixture of a few different approaches to observational art-making. There's the still-life/in-studio tradition where the artist narrows their focus on just a small portion of their field of view. There's plein-air landscape painting, where often the goal is to widen the field of view as much as possible and take in sweeping vistas. There's architectural and perspective drawing, where the challenge is to effectively depict human-made spaces with their corresponding geometry in a convincing way. And there's figurative art, where capturing the human form in one way or another is the goal. You can find examples of each of thes...

Funnin' with perspective

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And one non-participant. First, the stick in the mud: East high School. Now for the hi-jinx: Press Coffee Co, Lakewood: Inside the Tivoli Student Union, Metro State Campus, Denver:  

cahier notebooks and buildings

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I finally bought a couple Moleskine "cahier" gridded notebooks the other day. The paper is a bit thin, but the grids are fun for perspective drawing. These little 2-point perspective sketches are 3 1/2" x 5 1/2" inches long. They also reveal the limitations of my architectural creativity.